All General aviation articles – Page 663
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News
Cessna
Gary Hay is named vice-chairman at light-aircraft manufacturer Cessna Aircraft of Wichita, Kansas. David Assard has become president and chief operating officer and Charles Johnson is promoted to executive vice-president for operations. Hay with Cessna for 29 years, and Assard, the former president of Textron Lycoming's turbine-engine operations, became executive ...
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UK Honours
Among aerospace personalities honoured in the UK New Year honours list are: Roger Hurn, chairman and chief executive of Smiths Industries, who receives a knighthood for services to the engineering industry; Bill Gunston, a former technical editor of Flight International, who receives the OBE for services to aviation journalism; Alan ...
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Wicked Wilga
POLAND'S PZL-OKECIE IS offering an armed version of its PZL-104 Wilga general-purpose light aircraft to an unspecified third-world country for border patrol and counter-insurgency duties. The aircraft is a basic Wilga with the addition of two under-wing pylons carrying unguided or guided rockets or gun pods. About 1,000 examples of ...
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SJ30 tests make progress
Graham Warwick/ATLANTA SINO SWEARINGEN Aircraft (SSAC) has completed bird-strike testing for the SJ30 light business-jet. Tests were conducted at windshield manufacturer PPG in Huntsville, Alabama, and SSAC says "...the metal cockpit structure required no repairs after the 320kt [590km/h], 4lb [1.8kg] bird strikes." The first US ...
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Production MD 600N lifts off
THE FIRST production model of the MD 600N helicopter had its maiden flight at the McDonnell Douglas Helicopter Systems (MDHS) Mesa plant in Arizona on 15 December. MDHS experimental test pilot Chan Morse flew the MD 600N for 30min, reaching a top speed of around 100kt (185km/h) in ...
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Air Atlantique extends engine life
AIR ATLANTIQUE has applied to the UK Civil Aviation Authority for an almost 60% extension of the time between overhauls (TBO) on the Teledyne Continental GTSIO-520 piston engines powering its Cessna 404 Titans. The first of four tear down inspections required by the CAA, has revealed no problems ...
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Airlines
Kevin O'Toole/Business Editor THE WORLD AIRLINE INDUSTRY finally shook off the recession in 1995, to produce what are likely to be the highest profits on record. Barring unforeseen disasters, the industry should continue to forge ahead in 1996. The figures have yet to be collated for ...
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Late Skyhawks
New production Cessna Aircraft 172 Skyhawks will not be rolled off the company's new $45 million manufacturing plant at the Independence, Kansas, municipal airport until December - about three months later than planned. Poor weather had slowed down progress. Source: Flight International
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Brussels fails to use its muscles
The new European Commission has held office for a year but has little to show for its efforts, despite the initial hype. Mark Odell looks at Brussels' performance in regulating a market where competition is on the increase.When Neil Kinnock took over as the new European transport commissioner in January ...
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Lloyd's find out what's in a Name
After several horrendous years in which the accumulated losses of the London insurance market climbed to £8.2 billion ($12.7 billion), it is at last possible to believe that Lloyd's is far enough along the road to recovery and reform to remain a significant factor in the global insurance industry. ...
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Smooth operators
The third package not only improved market access, it gave European Economic Area carriers the ability to choose the most favourable environment for their operations. Dermot Scully reports on the advantages of using more than one licence.European airlines are beginning to recognise the full extent of the potential benefits ...
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BAe/Dassault joint research foreshadows wider defence link
Kevin O'Toole/LONDON BRITISH AEROSPACE AND Dassault Aviation are setting up a joint research centre, in a venture, which foreshadows the creation of a single European military-aircraft company to rival the US giants. The initial aim is to establish a "centre of excellence" to develop technologies ...
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Citation X changes confirmed by Cessna
Graham Warwick/ATLANTA CESSNA AIRCRAFT PLANS to deliver the first Citation X high-speed business jet in June 1996, a delay of two months, following full US certification of the aircraft with an increased payload. The US manufacturer had been aiming for basic US certification of the Mach 0.92 aircraft ...
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Stevens
Jim Amador has been named vice-president for aircraft sales at maintainer and technical-service company Stevens Aviation, of Greenville, South Carolina. A member of Stevens' sales team since 1994, Amador was formerly vice-president for aircraft sales at JetCorp of St Louis, Missouri. Source: Flight International
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IPTN/Ericsson look at CN-235 variant
INDUSTRI Pesawat Terbang Nusantara (IPTN) and Ericsson are studying development of a maritime-surveillance version of the CN-235 turboprop for the Indonesian air force. Ericsson has proposed fitting the Indonesian-built version of the CN-235 with a dorsal-mounted Erieye electronically scanned phased-array radar. The aircraft would be able to accommodate ...
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GA association boosts CRM training
Forbes Mutch/LONDON THE UK GENERAL Aviation Manufacturers and Traders Association (GAMTA), has completed a benchmarking exercise into cockpit/crew-resource-management (CRM) training. The concluding report, published in association with Cranfield University, Bedfordshire, recommends the establishment of a central library of CRM training resources, including videos and other ...
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NZ sidesteps ICAO rules in ATC strike
Paul Phelan/CAIRNSDavid Learmount/LONDON NEW ZEALANDS privatised air-traffic-control (ATC) service sidestepped International Civil Aviation Authority (ICAO) procedures during a 4-6 December controller strike says, the international aviation organisation. The strike, which seriously disrupted domestic and international schedules, was due to be repeated on 12-15 December. The ...
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Jet Aviation's success in outfitting
Sir - The main reason for Jet Aviation's success in outfitting and customising aircraft interiors is missed in Julian Moxon's article "An inside story" (Flight International, 22-28 November). In the 1970s and 1980s, as chief pilot of a presidential flight of five business jets, I had experience of ...
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Textron revamps Bell/Cessna structure
TEXTRON HAS announced management changes at its Bell Helicopter and Cessna Aircraft units. David Assard has been promoted to the newly created post of president at Cessna, reporting to chairman and chief executive Russ Meyer. Other changes at Cessna include the promotion of executive vice-president Gary Hay to ...



















